Archive for the ‘Ethics’ Category

Bunzl, Matti. “Of Holograms and Storage Areas: Modernity and Postmodernity at Vienna’s Jewish Museum.” Cultural Anthropology 18:4 (2003) : 435-468.

Wednesday, April 2nd, 2008

Matti Bunzl, Anthropologist at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, describes the two permanent exhibits at Vienna’s Jewish Museum. The first is a room of holograms, each hologram containing images that collectively communicate a theme in Jewish experience. The theme Worship, for example, brought together images of Kiddush cups and Torah shields from different time periods. The holograms explored the idea of objects-as-heterotopias: they changed when viewed from different angles, they served as memory aids—they became mirrors for the visitor’s own history rather than dictating a history to the visitor. The holograms refused to assume historical, truthful authority. The second exhibit was essentially a sort of open storage room full of objects without labels, again encouraging the visitor to draw from their own experiences to make the objects important.

The museum has been often criticized for its lack of historical narrative; many visitors have found its interpretation of and memorial to the Holocaust inadequate. Bunzl explains how Jews have been manipulated as a group throughout the history of Austria—first, how they were excluded as degenerates to define a white Austria in contrast, then how they were absorbed and ignored in the wake of Austria-as-victim of the Nazis, and finally, how they have been celebrated as evidence that Austria is a liberal, European-Union-class nation. The curators of the museum have used their institution to defy the government’s manipulation—to encourage visitors to construct their own Jewishness. Unfortunately, this subtlety is often lost on the uninitiated visitor.

Foucault, Michel. “Texts/Contexts: Of Other Spaces.” Grasping the World: The Idea of the Museum. Eds. D. Preziosi and C. Farago. Hants, England: Ashgate, 2004. 371-379.

Wednesday, April 2nd, 2008

Michel Foucault explains the concept of heterotopia: a mirror-realm of layered and interrelated truths without systematic, temporal, or spatial orders. He describes two types of heterotopias in societies: crisis heterotopias and heterotopias of deviation; ethnographic museums are an example of both in that they house collections of cultures and histories in an attempt to create a place outside time, and in that they attempt to describe the other—those deviating from the ‘Western’ norm. His definition of heterotopia has provided an insightful framework for evaluating objects and museums. Foucault describes 6 principles of heterotopias: 1. that all cultures have heterotopias, 2. that society can change the ways in which heterotopias function (particularly useful as it applies to museums and new postmodern approaches), 3. that heterotopias can superimpose many conflicting and/or paradoxical elements in a single space (useful in describing the social and historical biographies of objects), 4. that the concept of heterotopia gives rise to the concept of heterochronia (of which a museum is an example, as it accumulates histories and objects with their own layered histories onto itself), 5. that heterotopias all have systems of inclusion and exclusion (some examples in museums are security screening, implied behavioral rules, etc.), and 6. that heterotopias function relative to the surrounding space (relevant to the idea of museum as microcosm of social, political, and economic relationships).